Heating and ventilating buildings : a manual for heating engineers and architects . Fig. 109.—Indirect Heating Surface. vent. Fig. 110.—Indirect Pipe Coil. nearly as possible at the foot of a vertical flue leading to theroom to be heated. _ Air is admitted through jJ!?SHl^l^i>JJ|lt-iJK:il,B-:a passage from the out-side provided with suit-able dampers to a pointbeneath the indirectstacks. It is taken offgenerally on the oppositeside, and directly into theflue leading into the roomto be heated. The chamber surround-ing the indirect radi-ator is usually built ofa casing of matched wood, as in
Heating and ventilating buildings : a manual for heating engineers and architects . Fig. 109.—Indirect Heating Surface. vent. Fig. 110.—Indirect Pipe Coil. nearly as possible at the foot of a vertical flue leading to theroom to be heated. _ Air is admitted through jJ!?SHl^l^i>JJ|lt-iJK:il,B-:a passage from the out-side provided with suit-able dampers to a pointbeneath the indirectstacks. It is taken offgenerally on the oppositeside, and directly into theflue leading into the roomto be heated. The chamber surround-ing the indirect radi-ator is usually built ofa casing of matched wood, as in Fig. in and Fig. 112, sus-
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1910